Department of Corrections Contributes Labor and Funds to Flood and Storm Victims

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Department of Corrections Contributes Labor and Funds to Help Flood and Storm Victims

Corrections teams invest 1,548 full work days in flood relief efforts

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

Sept. 10, 2019

Contact:  Karen Pojmann, Communications Director
Missouri Department of Corrections
573-522-1118
Karen.Pojmann@doc.mo.gov

When storms and floods struck the state in the spring and summer of 2019, Missouri Department of Corrections staff and offenders invested long work days and hard-earned dollars to help fellow Missourians.

Supervised by staff working extra hours outside their usual shifts, more than 350 offenders from Missouri prisons contributed 1,548 work days to flood relief, filling and placing sandbags to save towns threatened by rising flood waters.

Working from March 15 through July 10, corrections teams helped communities including St. Joseph, Clarksville, Norborne, Brunswick, Kimmswick, Henrietta, New Franklin and Hardin County. Some workers filled sandbags at their facilities, while the bulk labored at the flood sites, building sandbag barriers to keep the waters out. The biggest contributor was Women’s Eastern Reception, Diagnostic & Correctional Center in Vandalia, which sent 81 women to Clarksville to help with sandbagging between March 16 and June 1.

Along with physical labor, corrections groups offered financial assistance during the season.

To help communities affected by flooding, offenders in the Western Reception, Diagnostic & Correctional Center restorative justice organization raised $2,000 for Holt County Community Services, while their counterparts at Maryville Treatment Center donated $1,000 to Community Services of Nodaway County. Offenders in the Southeast Correctional Center veterans organization gave $1,000 to storm victims. Statewide, incarcerated Missourians donated $695 to the Red Cross using a canteen code.

Throughout the state, staff took care of their teams. At Algoa Correctional Center, staff raised $420 for coworkers affected by tornadoes and floods, while Cremer Therapeutic Community Center staff donated $370 and Fulton Reception, Diagnostic & Correctional Center staff gave $676. Chillicothe Correctional Center staff donated $258 to corrections flood victims through the Corrections Peace Officers Foundation.

Offenders on work release with the Missouri Department of Transportation continue to help clean up debris left behind by storms and receding flood waters.

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